Re: The You Game!
Posted: Thu Feb 25, 2016 10:23 pm
Awesome! Can < be on there too?Fifo wrote:< just added Bradley Hernandez to <’s ignore list.
Awesome! Can < be on there too?Fifo wrote:< just added Bradley Hernandez to <’s ignore list.
No, you’re a nice person Imco!Imco wrote:Awesome! Can < be on there too?Fifo wrote:< just added Bradley Hernandez to <’s ignore list.
Baby.Hoozang wrote:Yeah fuck you too ^, yesterday you creeped the shit out of <.
< hopes you get better soon Pirez.Pirez wrote:< is in a shitty mood today. Everything pisses < off.
< is back from school.Pirez wrote:< is in a shitty mood today. Everything pisses < off.
< says Fifo is wrong. PC originally means personal computers, which a Mac is. And if you understand the term as IBM PC compatible:Fifo wrote:< says no it’s not. It’s not an IBM-compatible PC.Hunchman801 wrote:< says a Mac is a PC anyway.
< says you can insert physical media in them though, such as an iPhone 6. There's a nice slot on the side.Chris Hoffman wrote:In 2006, Apple began transitioning Macs to run on Intel’s x86 chips instead of the PowerPC architecture. This wasn’t just swapping out a chip manufacturer — Mac OS transitioned from being a PowerPC operating system to being an x86 operating system. Macs now use the same Intel chips found in “PCs.” The last version of Mac OS X to even run on PowerPCs at all was Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard back in 2009.
Yeah I know they’re “personal computers”, but they’re not IBM-compatible PCs.Hunchman801 wrote:< says Fifo is wrong. PC originally means personal computers, which a Mac is. And if you understand the term as IBM PC compatible:Chris Hoffman wrote:In 2006, Apple began transitioning Macs to run on Intel’s x86 chips instead of the PowerPC architecture. This wasn’t just swapping out a chip manufacturer — Mac OS transitioned from being a PowerPC operating system to being an x86 operating system. Macs now use the same Intel chips found in “PCs.” The last version of Mac OS X to even run on PowerPCs at all was Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard back in 2009.
< says that slot on the side of an iPhone is just a nano-SIM slot. But it’s just for cellular access. You can’t store normal data on a SIM card!Hunchman801 wrote:< says you can insert physical media in them though, such as an iPhone 6. There's a nice slot on the side.
< understands. < still wouldn’t call Macs “PCs”.Master wrote:Not originally, no. Current Macs have been IBM compatible ever since they switched to Intel, if < remembers right.